Page 8 -The Michigan Dily- Saturday, November 3, 1984 Leading 3-0, icers fall apart, lose 74 By ADAM MARTIN Special to the Daily DURHAM, N.H.-Before arriving in New Hampshire, Red Berenson stressed that he wanted more emphasis on the first period when his Wolverines faced off against the UNH Wildcats last night. Well, Red got just what he wan- ted-and a full slab of things he didn't want as the Wildcats scratched and growled their way to a 7-4 victory last night at Snively Arena. "I'M disappointed," said Berenson, "We had the edge in the first period and lost it." What Michigan lost was that all- important momentum, courtesy of a slew of penalties and an improved New Hampshire power play. UNH gathered three power-play goals, including one with a two man ad- vantage-the responsibility of an angry bunch of Wolverines, who were hit with nine two-minute minors. "PENALTIES were a big factor tonight," said Berenson. "We took some bad penalties and couldn't get things going again." But while his opponents were stymied, UNH coach Charlie Holt's team saw an opportunity and took it. The Wolverines were the victims. "We were down, but not out," said Holt, "and we bounced back." IN THE first period, the Wolverines began a barrage that should have given them a five-goal lead. But because two of those tallies were disallowed (Michigan was called for manning the crease), the lead was only three. It was plenty, however, to give the Wolverines the initial edge in momen- tum-something Michigan hasn't en- joyed in its six previous games. The lead came largely as a result of goaltender Tim Makris. The freshman from Marlboro, Mass. stopped fifteen Wildcat shots in the period, displaying the coolness and confidence of an ex- perienced goalie in his first college start. THE Wolverines scored first at 7:36 when defenseman Bill Brauer took a Bruce Macnab flip pass from the slot and popped in his first goal of the season. Three minutes later, Brad Jones, Michigan's leading scorer, beat New Hampshire's Greg Rota with a wrist shot to the top corner for a 2-0 Wolverine lead. Tom Stiles got the assist on that goal and would later score one of his own. Todd Carlile notched Michigan's third goal at 17:45, redirecting a John Bjorkman centering pass behind Rota. BUT Michigan's momentum advan- tage was nullified quickly in the second stanza, thanks to a stepped-up Wildcat attack which produced four goals in 11 minutes. The Wildcats finally got on the board at 5:36 of the second when Kirk Lussier tipped in Allister Brown's backhander that Makris couldn't control. UNH brought the deficit to one on its sixth power-play goal of the season. Dan Muse's sharp backhand shot off the right post bounced in behind Makris at 8:27, and the Wildcats were beginning to scratch away at what had looked like an insurmountable lead at the end of the first period. UNH mobilized from then on, and jumped out to a lead the Wolverines couldn't overcome. How important were the penalties? Just ask Tim Makris. "We played great in the first, and from then on it was just one word-penalties. The penalties got us." Purdue spikers boil M; 3-1 Just like the Cubs FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Brauer (Macnab, Downing) 7:36; 2. M-Jones (Stiles) 10:20; 3. M-Carlile (Bjorkman, D. Goff) 17:45. Penalties: M-Dries (interference) 11:44; M-Norton (cross checking)19: 17. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. UNH-Lussier (Brown, Robinson) 5:36; 2. UNH-Douris (Muse, Lee) 8:27; 3. UNH-Ellison (Herms, Skidmore) 10:20; 4. UNH-Douris (Richmond, Lussier) 11:05. Penalties: M-Dries (hooking) 3:27; M-Brauer (holding) 7:30; M-Bjorkman (high sticking) 11:01; M-Jones (elbowing) 18:48. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 5. UNH-Muse (unassisted) 4:13; 6. UNH-Herms (unassisted) 8:23; 4. M-Stiles (Jones, McCaughey) 11:03; 7. UNH-Ellison (Douris, Skid- more) 15:08. Penalties: M-Macnab (holding) 3:03; M-Norton (interference) 3:56; UNH-Skidmore (interference) 8:02; UNH-Byrnes (tripping) 8:47; M-Norton (cross checking) 14:39; UNH-Leach (interference) 16:57; UNH-Byrnes (interference, high sticking) 17:32; M-Norton (roughing) 19:29; UNH-Robinson (roughing) 19:29. SCORING BY PERIOD 1 2 3 T MICHIGAN ..................... 3 0 1 -4 New Hampshire ................. 0 4 3 -7 Goalie saves: M-Makris, 33; UNH-Rota, 34. Stiles ... goal's too Ittle, too late By SKIP GOODMAN The Michigan spikers limped into last night's match with first-place Purdue licking the wounds from three straight road losses but first-year coach Barb Canning was optimistic about her team's chances. "We were hoping to catch them off guard," Canning said after the Wolverines fell to the Boilermakers, 15- 8, 9-15, 15-8, and 15-11. PURDUE'S Marianne Smith led a relentless Boilermaker attack in game one with four spike kills and several key blocks. The listless Wolverines let six deep shots by Purdue go by only to have them land fair. Michigan came out sharp for the second game, jumping to a 4-0 lead. Purdue countered with a seven-point run on serves by 6-2 junior Smith. But the organized Wolverines, utilizing trick sets by Andrea Williams and Lisa Vahi, rebounded to leave the Boiler- makers in the dust, 15-9. The two teams traded points in the third game until the score reached 7-7. After a Purdue timeout, the Boiler- maker returned to the hard-hitting tac- tics that brought them the victory in game one. Purdue coach Carol Dewey beefed up her front line with seniors Beck Winsett and Kate Crandall. The two six-footers blocked nearly everything the beleaguered Wolverines tried to hit over the net. Purdue coasted to the win and a 2-1 advantage in the match. The Boilermakers controlled game three, allowing the Wolverine's only spikes from Jenny Hickman and Heather Olsen. Purdue freshman Linda Reichl and teammate Smith scattered the Michigan spikers with bruising shots and frustrated the Wolverine of- fensive effort with their airtight defen- se at the net. The Boilermakers went on to a four-point victory and the match. Canning was not disappointed with her team's effort. She pointed out Pur- due's distinct height advantage and was impressed with her club's ability to disrupt the Boiler offense with effective serving. Said Canning, "We were able to make them change their plays and make mistakes." She added that Michigan would work on its ability to counter the type of blocking that the Boilermakers used to dominate the 4 match. Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE Michigan's Andrea Williams (13) goes high to slam one past the Purdue front line in last night's volleyball action. Williams' effort went for naught as the Boilermakers took three of four games in the match. COLLINS REMAINS OPTIMISTIC: Iowa clubs By DAVE ARETHA Her team, which has won only one game in 17 tries, had just been defeated by three goals, and the wind chill was hovering around zero. Yet Michigan field hockey coach Karen Collins was in a good mood. "The team played very well, they did some things I asked them to do," said Collins after the Wolverines fell to Iowa, the eighth-rated team in the country, 4-1. "You learn through playing teams like Iowa," she added. THE COACH could overlook the seemingly lop- sided score since the game was tied as late as the middle of the second half. Only then did Iowa's Kim Herrmann score the first of her two goals to put the Hawkeyes ahead to stay. Collins preferred to look at Lisa Murray's first goal of the season and at the strong goaltending of Jonnie Terry who made several sterling saves. "Jonnie did a very good job in goal," said Collins. 0- stickers, 4- Terry had to be sharp because Iowa fired shots at the Wolverine goal almost continuously. The Hawkeyes finished with 36 shots on net. Collins chose to discuss the future rather than the team's 1-12-4 record. She said that the squad has a similar outlook and that team morale is high. "THEY'RE A young team - they know they're a young team - and they look towards the future," Collins said. Among its 14 regular players, Michigan has four freshman and four sophomores. Yesterday's game was played under frigid con- ditions. It was especially cold for the players who had to wear skirts and short sleeve jerseys. But Collins said the cold did not affect the teams ability to keep their minds on the game. The Wolverines have just one more chance to pick up their second win. They close out the season against Purdue tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. 1 0 A Grapplers debut in Fame Classic By MARK BOROWSKY With the Big Ten being one of the perennially tough con- ferences in the nation, one might expect the Michigan wrestling team to begin its season with a proverbial light- weight. Not so. The Wolverines start their season today in Stillwater, Oklahoma, at the Hall of Fame Classic, where they will grapple with two heavyweights indeed - Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Along with Iowa and Iowa State, the s Sooners and Cowboys constitute the 'Big Four" of collegiate wrestling that annually dominates the NCAA. YET HEAD coach Dale Bahr feels that the Classic will give his squad a good start for the new season and that Michigan will provide some heavy competition of its own. "This is the first time a Michigan team has ever been in- vited to the Classic and our guys are looking forward to wrestling some of the nation's best," Bahr said, whose squad will also face a team of Japanese collegiate all-stars. "Both Oklahoma and OSU have returning All-Americans in several weight classes, but I think we have the talent to make a good showing." Bahr can make such statements in all sincerity, for he is looking at one of the finest Wolverine squads in recentI history. There are four returning NCAA qualifiers, and nine out of ten weight classes are filled by returning starters, none of which are more prominent than senior captain Joe Mc- Farland. "JOE HAS been our top man for three straight years and just keeps getting better," Bahr said of the returning Big Ten champ at 126 pounds. "Even if we move him up to the 134- pound division, he's going to keep winning - he will prove he's the best." The other NCAA qualifiers - seniors Scott Rechsteiner (177 pounds) and Kirk Trost (190 pounds) along with junior heavyweight Walt Dunayczan - should provide much- needed consistency in the long road to the Big Ten and NCAA meets in March. Not one to count victories before they are hatched, Bahr is cautiously optimistic, despite the talent at his disposal. "We aren't making any predictions at this point, but we did have some goals we would like to achieve. One of them is to make some believers out of the fans down in Oklahoma." O M E DYAnn Arbor's own OM Comedy Theater COM PANYTroupe I O/O/ Live ................................... ................................... ................................... ................................... m I